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Instruction
Meets Discipline

Partner teaching is one of the Say, See, Do Teaching formats that makes concepts experiential. The procedure described below is simple and can be used in any subject area. It is uniquely suited, however, to producing performance with concepts in social studies.

First, arrange students into partner pairs. This is a subtle process in which you pair strong with weak, while avoiding best friends, worst enemies, and other combinations that just wont work. Partner-pairing will determine your seating arrangement because you will want students to interact by simply turning to their neighbors.

To begin input, teach a chunk of the concept and then say, Teach your partner. Partner A teaches Partner B, complete with an explanation and demonstration -- just as you did. Then Partner B teaches Partner A in the same fashion. Repeat the process as you move on to the next step, and the next.

The first time you use partner-teaching, practice with a piece of review material. The initial lesson is, How do we behave during this format? All your corrective feedback will be aimed at training students to implement partner-teaching properly. The errors of greatest concern to you are format errors.

The most common format errors are: 1) parallel play, and 2) lazy teaching. In parallel play, partners are doing the task side-by-side, but nobody is talking. In lazy teaching, one person is explaining while the other person is doing. Both of those short-cuts reduce the integration of modalities. Partner-teaching is an excellent prewriting activity.

Source: Instruction Meets Discipline

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09/14/2010



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